Editor: Casey's Gold & Resource Report
Having worked on his family’s gold claims in C... More
by Jeff Clark, Senior Editor, Casey’s Gold & Resource Report
“There’s no doubt in my mind that we’ll have a mania in gold. And because the gold and especially silver markets are so tiny, the rush into them will be like trying to push the contents of Hoover Dam through a garden hose. Our positions will go absolutely ballistic.” –Doug Casey, September 2009
Dear Readers,
Elmer Sutton’s eyebrows shot up when he saw the ad proclaiming gold stocks might make you wealthy.
It sounded like the perfect solution for his stock portfolio, loaded with investments going nowhere. He vaguely recalled hearing a little about gold, but if what the ad said was true, he thought he could make a killing.
So he called the broker and made an appointment for the next day. The broker seemed very knowledgeable and took the time to explain why he felt gold stocks were one of the best investments right now. He said this was not a get-rich-quick scheme, but that if you stuck with it, you could see potentially enormous profits. It sounded good. Elmer wrote a check for $2,500, and the broker bought three gold stocks for him.
The very next day, gold took a big drop and his spankin’ new gold stocks sold off hard. Not only that, there were riots in South Africa, where one of the companies was located. Elmer was instantly disgusted. He was losing money yet again. This time, however, he’d play it smart and get out before he lost it all – something his wife made sure he understood – so he hastily called the broker and told him he wanted his money back.
“Elmer, you can’t do that,” the broker told him. “This isn’t Woolworth’s.”
“I’m not buying them!” he yelled to the broker and slammed the phone down. Elmer wanted out, and that was that. He wasn’t about to lose any more money in the stock market.
Three years later, long after he’d forgotten about that broker, newspaper headlines were screaming about gold. Everyone at the party Elmer attended the night before was talking about how well their gold stocks were doing. His co-workers bragged about the good deals they were getting buying gold and silver coins. Everyone was talking about precious metals.
Elmer panicked; he didn’t want to be left behind. He scrounged around the house until he found the original confirmations of the trade he'd broken with “that broker”: 1,500 shares of Grootvlei at 35˘, 500 Anglo American at $2.50, and 1,000 Leslie at 50˘. He grabbed his newspaper and saw that Anglo was up 500% since then, and the others were paying dividends – this year alone – totaling more than he would have paid for his shares in 1976.
As the newspaper went limp in his hands, he had a vague recollection of the broker he met with and quickly tracked down the phone number. “I want to buy some gold stocks,” he breathlessly panted to the secretary answering the phone. She said the broker wasn’t in, and that while they would be happy to buy a stock for him, they were actually recommending investors sell their gold stocks.
Elmer couldn’t believe it. How ludicrous! Everyone he knew was buying, and he was personally acquainted with many people who were getting rich. He pushed on. “Look, everyone’s into gold right now. It’s on the front page of the paper, for crying out loud. So I want to buy some gold stocks right away.”
“That’s fine, sir, but I think you should talk to the broker first,” the secretary replied. “We really don’t recommend you do that.”
“I don’t care!” Elmer screamed, which he didn’t mean to do, but panic was setting in. “What’s this clown’s name anyway?”
“Doug Casey,” she replied.
Please Don’t Crowd the Emergency Exit
This true story explains how Doug Casey bought gold stocks at the very bottom of the market, as he took on those abandoned shares from Elmer. But today’s lesson underscores what Doug Casey saw back in the late 1970s: there’s certain to be a rush into gold and silver, and buying before Main Street catches gold fever is the only way to play this trend.
Because when Midas fever hits, prices will explode to the upside, for both the metals and the stocks. How do we know that?
First, let’s look at gold. If we added up all the gold ever mined on the planet, its total value would equal no more than $5 trillion at today’s prices. Yet, look at how this compares to the debt and bailouts and other monetary mischief of current governments...

*MZM (Money of Zero Maturity) is a measure of the liquid money supply in the economy. It consists of coins and currency, checking accounts, savings deposits, and money market funds.
**Year to date figures.
Let’s make this chart very clear. Of the $5 trillion in gold ever mined...

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